Harlem’s Marcus Samuelsson On Leadership

November 14, 2015

marcus-samuelsson1Celebrity chef and Harlemite Marcus Samuelsson’s days have been unusually full over the past year, even by his globe-traversing standards.

In April, he opened Streetbird Rotisserie near his Harlem flagship, Red Rooster, and he spearheaded the Harlem EatUp! festival, held in May. There were also new restaurants in Bermuda and Sweden, along with a cookbook and a memoir aimed at kids, called Make It Messy, and another book Marcus Off Duty: The Recipes I Cook at Home, he’s on the board of C-Cap —which is a good description of his hectic itinerary.

Sleep Schedule
“I’m about a seven-hour guy. I don’t do a lot of stuff [I used to do]. I don’t go to [chef hangout] Blue Ribbon at 3 a.m. I don’t drink a lot. I can’t wake up with a headache.”

Staying Connected
“Every Wednesday, we have a team meeting at 10 a.m. No matter where I am in the world, I’m calling in. I have another conference call with my executive team on Tuesdays. Those are the centers of my week.”

E-Mail Pet Peeve
“I hate [writing] long emails. You’re sitting there thinking, Is my tone right? Because there can be 50 ways of misinterpreting that email. Text­ing is better: ‘Let’s talk.’ Then you follow up with a conversation.”

Work On Weekends and Vacation
“I don’t have weekends. I don’t have vacations. When you’re a chef, you give everything to your work. My work is personal. That’s the point.”

“I sometimes need to get out of the way so my team can create better. As a leader you’re also a teacher, and sometimes it’s easier to say, ‘The answer is right here!’ Then you’ve killed the process—no one on the team learns anything. You didn’t evolve; you just did more stuff.”

Bad Habit
“I sometimes need to get out of the way so my team can create better. As a leader you’re also a teacher, and sometimes it’s easier to say, ‘The answer is right here!’ Then you’ve killed the process—no one on the team learns anything. You didn’t evolve; you just did more stuff.”

Nightly Ritual
My wife and I, at around 11:30 or 12, we talk. Not just, ‘How are you?’ I like to have a soulful conversation with her, a meaningful conversation. And then after that, I fall asleep within two seconds. I am just beat. I am beat.”

Photos: Andreas Laszlo KonrathA version of this article appeared in the November 2015 issue of Fast Company Magazine.


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